<Quote>
the feedback loop involves a lot of
information that is not easily or cannot be collected automatically to put in
the feedback loop.Sometimes the human effort required to get the information is
beyond the resource of the organisation.
</Quote>
Yet Bain had no trouble calculating the
amount of time they have spent on the problem organization-wide, and sending
that information to you:)
Joe (sorry, couldn't
resist;)
From: Rick Marshall
[mailto:rjm@zenucom.com]
Sent: Fri 6/16/2006 6:45 PM
To:
Bullard, Claude L (Len)
Cc: Costello, Roger L.;
xml-dev@lists.xml.org
Subject: Re: [xml-dev] Clustering Customization
Vs Global Standards
The big problem with all this stuff (and I've spent a lot of
time -
longer than Bain's) trying to figure this one out - the feedback
loop
involves a lot of information that is not easily or cannot be
collected
automatically to put in the feedback loop. Sometimes the human
effort
required to get the information is beyond the resource of the
organisation.
I suspect (and it may have to wait for my retirement to
find time to
prove it) that a dom aware neural network is the correct answer
to these
problems...
Bullard, Claude L (Len) wrote:
> http://hbsworkingknowledge.hbs.edu/item.jhtml?id=5376&t=globalization
>
<http://hbsworkingknowledge.hbs.edu/item.jhtml?id=5376&t=globalization>
>
>
This concept should not be new to readers of this list. In the
>
article, the authors are using data gathering to tune the
>
customization. In the past, we have discussed dynamic schemas that
>
are modified by feedback from the environment. The applications
are
> different, but the solutions are variations of
feedback-control.
>
> It can be useful to look at different
models for tuning the feedback
> system itself. PIDS controllers are
one example. Analogizing these
> to dynamic schema systems shouldn't
be difficult.
>
> len
>
!DSPAM:4492b5d761721804284693!